Master Agreement for Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program - FDIC - fdic 2025

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and since the FDICs creation, no one has lost a penny of their FDIC-insured deposits.
The Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program was a two-pronged program of the FDIC to backstop U.S. banks during the 2008 financial crisis. The first part of the program, the TAGP, guaranteed customer deposits. The second, the DGP, guaranteed short-term debt issued by banks.
Still, the FDIC itself doesnt have unlimited money. If enough banks flounder at once, it could deplete the fund that backstops deposits. However, experts say even in that event, bank patrons shouldnt worry about losing their FDIC-insured money.
The FDIC provides deposit insurance to protect your money in the event of a bank failure. Your deposits are automatically insured to at least $250,000 at each FDIC-insured bank.
List of largest bank failures in the United States BankCityAssets at time of failure Inflation-adjusted (2024) Washington Mutual Seattle $448 billion First Republic Bank San Francisco $229 billion Silicon Valley Bank Santa Clara $209 billion77 more rows
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Throughout its history, the FDIC has provided insured depositors with prompt access to their funds whenever an FDIC-insured bank or savings association has failed and no insured depositor has ever lost any funds.
The FDIC does not insure: Stock Investments. Bond Investments. Mutual Funds. Crypto Assets. Life Insurance Policies. Annuities. Municipal Securities. Safe Deposit Boxes or their contents.

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